Buoy System Invented in the Florida Keys Helps Protect Reefs Everywhere

Nonfiction, Sports, Water Sports, Scuba & Snorkeling, Science & Nature, Science, Biological Sciences, Marine Biology
Cover of the book Buoy System Invented in the Florida Keys Helps Protect Reefs Everywhere by Tim Grollimund, Tim Grollimund
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Author: Tim Grollimund ISBN: 9781370345212
Publisher: Tim Grollimund Publication: March 2, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Tim Grollimund
ISBN: 9781370345212
Publisher: Tim Grollimund
Publication: March 2, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

The Mooring Buoy System started with an idea, was implemented on a small scale, and grew to become a world dominating practice. John Halas told me that as an employee of the Key Largo National Marine Sanctuary in 1981, the light bulb went off, and he thought through his idea, presented it to the powers that be, and got permission to set 6 experimental mooring buoys on French Reef using Harold Hudson’s core sampling technique. Those first 6 mooring buoys, with years of maintenance, are still on French Reef today. Today in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, we have nearly 800 mooring and special use buoys. The number worldwide is over 4,000. In a modern era where most of the world’s reefs are in trouble, the implications for reef conservation from the mooring buoy system are incalculable.

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The Mooring Buoy System started with an idea, was implemented on a small scale, and grew to become a world dominating practice. John Halas told me that as an employee of the Key Largo National Marine Sanctuary in 1981, the light bulb went off, and he thought through his idea, presented it to the powers that be, and got permission to set 6 experimental mooring buoys on French Reef using Harold Hudson’s core sampling technique. Those first 6 mooring buoys, with years of maintenance, are still on French Reef today. Today in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, we have nearly 800 mooring and special use buoys. The number worldwide is over 4,000. In a modern era where most of the world’s reefs are in trouble, the implications for reef conservation from the mooring buoy system are incalculable.

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